How Much Does Final Expense Insurance Cost? A 2026 Rate Breakdown
By Diane Whitfield, Final Expense Insurance Specialist Β· Published April 5, 2026
"Just give me a ballpark" is the most reasonable request I get, and the hardest to answer in one number. Final expense premiums swing based on four things, and until I know those, any single figure is a guess. But the ranges are predictable enough that you can walk in with realistic expectations. Here is the honest breakdown, without the sales fog.
The short answer
Most seniors pay between $30 and $120 a month for $10,000 of final expense coverage in 2026. Your exact rate depends on four factors: your age, your gender, the coverage amount, and whether you qualify for simplified or guaranteed issue. Rates are level for life β the number is locked the day the policy is issued and never rises.
The four levers, in order of impact:
- Age. The single biggest factor. Every year older raises the premium.
- Coverage amount. Rates scale roughly with the face amount you choose.
- Gender. Women pay less because they live longer on average.
- Plan type. Guaranteed issue costs more than simplified for the same coverage.
Monthly cost by age for $10,000
These ranges reflect typical simplified issue rates in 2026. Guaranteed issue runs higher, and larger face amounts scale up from here.
| Age | Female | Male |
|---|---|---|
| 50 | $26β$38 / mo | $33β$48 / mo |
| 60 | $32β$48 / mo | $42β$62 / mo |
| 70 | $52β$78 / mo | $68β$98 / mo |
| 80 | $70β$110 / mo | $95β$150 / mo |
How the coverage amount changes the price
Premiums scale close to proportionally with the face amount. If $10,000 of coverage costs a 65-year-old woman about $45 a month, then $15,000 runs near $65 and $20,000 near $85. This is why choosing the right amount matters: buy what covers the funeral and final bills, not a round number that inflates the premium. The national median funeral runs about $8,300, so $10,000 to $15,000 fits most families.
Why the same policy varies between carriers
Two carriers will quote the identical 68-year-old very different prices for the same $10,000 policy β sometimes a 30 percent gap. Each insurer has its own pricing for specific age bands and health profiles. One is sharp on 60-somethings with diabetes; another is best for healthy 75-year-olds. There is no single cheapest company, only the cheapest company for you, which is the entire argument for comparing a few quotes at once instead of taking the first offer.
What does not change your rate
Once your whole life policy is issued, nothing raises it. Not aging, not a new diagnosis, not a hospital stay. The premium you lock at issue is the premium you pay at 95. That permanence is the reason whole life, not term, is the standard for this purpose β term expires and re-prices, often right when a senior needs it most.
My final advice
Ignore any flat "final expense costs X" claim you see online, because without your age, gender, amount, and plan type it means nothing. Pin down those four, decide on a coverage amount tied to a real funeral estimate, and have someone shop two or three carriers so you lock the lowest rate available for your profile. Then it is fixed for good.